Inspired by Dan Roam’s annotated-in-real-time presentation, I picked up a Wacom Bamboo Pen and Touch drawing tablet for portable use. I’ve got an upcoming talk (“Remote Presentations That Rock”) and I’ll need to deliver it from 3600 because of other appointments, so I can’t use my ever-so-wonderful Cintiq 12WX. I decided to spring for the multitouch tablet because I thought the extra buttons and multi-touch gestures would help me work as smoothly as I work on the Cintiq.

After some driver hassles, I got the new tablet working with drivers downloaded from Wacom’s website. The multitouch works better than expected, and I’ve been using it to scroll through webpages in Firefox. Zooming in and out worked with Inkscape, as does scrolling vertically, but scrolling horizontally or rotating don’t work.

I’m still getting used to looking at one surface while drawing on another, but that’s something I can pick up with practice.

Although a tablet PC would probably be an even more efficient way to handle all of this, I think my decision to explore the in-between steps was good. This way, I can add drawing capabilities to any of the computers.

Looks interesting. I’ve come to really, really like my Wacom Pen and Touch, though. I use the multitouch zoom and extra buttons a lot, and find myself even using those gestures when I’m on my Cintiq 12WX.

Jonathan Young

Hey Sacha, I bought an Intuos Wacom4 Medium earlier this year – a very cool product. Have even got the OLEDs working with Linux too. Shame I can’t draw! But it’s great for taking notes on conference calls (quieter than a keyboard too).
Is yours the Bamboo Touch?

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